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We switched from Case to Lexion in 2001. We had 5 class 6 combines and went to 3 class 8, now running class 9. At the time Lexion was ahead on combine front, having cylinder and rotor together. They all have come along ways, but so has the price !😩. We are 45 miles from 3 Deere,Case and New Holland dealers and 1 Lexion dealer. We find the Lexions work well for use and AgWest supports us well. We have Case Quads and sprayers, Deere MFD tractors, all very supportive and work well for us. Really comes down to what works for you and the dealer support ðŸ‘😃. Some aspects of our industry have to large of margins compared to the risk we endure year round! If us the farmers can have a steady income, that in turn helps our rural communities flourish and our lifestyle choices available, rather than herded to the city and communities shrinking. Everyone have a safe harvest and keep positive thoughts !😃
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Buying a Massey and trying to get out of it is like going through a bad divorce....you know it's going to cost you some money.
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Originally posted by MBgrower View Postlexions are made for small grains, JD is a corn combine. SK should be good match for Lexion machines
That’s the biggest difference with a Lexion.
Gleaner and New Holland are much more small grain designs actually.
We loved our Gleaners except for canola , that feed house just could not handle decent canola
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Originally posted by bucket View PostOh boy those lexions are quite the machine....
I seen 6 deeres come into the Lexion dealer and 4 Lexions left....that much more efficient????
What is your opinion of them....
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Originally posted by bucket View PostOh boy those lexions are quite the machine....
I seen 6 deeres come into the Lexion dealer and 4 Lexions left....that much more efficient????
What is your opinion of them....
Lots around here
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Originally posted by STRNGR View PostWhat has been working for us in SW Mb is 3 Lexion 760 with 40’ Macdon covering 12,000 acres, straight cutting all. Furthest land 8 miles away,main yard central, blocks of land 900-2000 acres. Start season seeding with 2 66’ drills & 60’ planter over 3 weeks at a steady pace. Start with 4000 acres HRSW, 1300 grain corn, 5500 canola , 900 soybeans & 300 oats. Harvest runs pretty steady till beans done , the corn is the dryers pace , run 1 combine 6-7 hrs to dryer 24 hrs. We update combines every 3 years, feel we are running with less down time Our work force is aging, but get along , have some fun in the process and enjoy the lifestyle of choice ðŸ‘😃
I seen 6 deeres come into the Lexion dealer and 4 Lexions left....that much more efficient????
What is your opinion of them....
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Originally posted by Marusko View PostYou wouldn't need another guy. Park the tandems at the entrance, one guy stays in the cart to fill the trucks and one guy hops back and forth between the trucks. It works because the trucker doesn't spend time chasing and unloading combines around the field anymore.
For fields close to home, park the truck at the auger, cart goes right to the bin. We can almost keep up to two class8 combines in a field 2 miles from home in 55bu canola in the heat of the day, 80bu wheat is a mile by road max. Cart guy needs to hustle though. 20mph if the field is smooth with no rocks and cart guy knows where the ditches are.
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